Father charged in son’s slaying 31 years later

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(CNN) — It’s been 31 years since Stanley Guidroz first reported his 3-year-old son missing in Tacoma, Washington.

Investigators, after reopening the cold case, now say the boy, Wallace Guidroz, was never missing at all and that his father had killed him.

Guidroz, 57, has been charged with first-degree manslaughter after he confessed to the crime, said Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist on Tuesday.

“This is another success for the Cold Case Unit,” said Lindquist. “Justice matters, no matter how long it takes.”

Guidroz first reported his son missing in January 1983, telling Tacoma police that his son had gone missing in a neighborhood park after they had gone fishing together. Guidroz said he believed that a family they had met in the park had kidnapped him, prosecutors said.

Police were unable to locate a family that fit the description Guidroz gave them, and they were unable to connect Guidroz to the boy’s disappearance.

In 2011, Cold Case Unit Detective Gene Miller reopened the case. Miller reviewed old documents from the initial investigation and saw that Guidroz’s stories never seemed to add up.

There were “several inconsistencies in Guidroz’s account of the events from the day Wallace went missing,” the release said.

Guidroz resurfaced in Louisiana in March 2011 after reports that he had been charged in the killing of his wife, who is not the mother of Wallace.

Guidroz was convicted of fatally stabbing his wife multiple times after they had gotten into an argument. He drove around aimlessly with her body in the back of his car before driving to a nearby police station and confessing to the murder, according to CNN affiliate WWL.

Miller traveled to Louisiana to question Guidroz about Wallace’s disappearance. Though Guidroz initially provided several more versions of his original story, he reportedly admitted to killing his son.

Guidroz said he and Wallace returned home after going fishing, but that he “lost it” after Wallace began fussing in his high chair. Guidroz said he hit the toddler, which caused the boy to fall to the floor and hit his head. Wallace wasn’t responsive after the fall and Guidroz told Miller that he “knew he was dead” but that he was afraid of being labeled a “child killer” in prison.

Guidroz buried Wallace near the Tacoma waterfront and then called police to report him missing, prosecutors said.

Guidroz is currently being held in a Louisiana prison for his wife’s murder. A warrant has been issued for Guidroz to return to Washington state, prosecutors say.